171 Ga. 427 | Ga. | 1930
Clyde Sansom brought his equitable petition against'O^ell Cornelison, in which petition it was alleged that defendant holds in trust for plaintiff certain property, which' he
Subsequently an amendment to the petition was offered and ordered filed; and to this amendment the defendant filed a demurrer, which upon hearing was sustained by the court and the amendment stricken; and upon hearing the general demurrer to the original petition was also sustained. To these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
We are of the opinion that the general demurrer to the petition was properly sustained. It is apparent that no trust, express or implied, had been created in favor of the petitioner. The defendant at the time of the death of the plaintiff’s father had, besides other personal property, some $700 of money in his hands. It was the duty of the administrator of the estate of the deceased father of the plaintiff to sue for this money and recover it, and a failure upon his part to do so would render him and the sureties upon his bond liable, unless the party having the $700 was insolvent and it could not be recovered by suit. There are none of the elements of a trust shown by the petition. The parties alleged to have imtheir possession the $700 were of course in duty bound to turn it over to the administrator. The agreement by the mother of the deceased father of plaintiff that the defendant and his wife should keep this money in trust for the plaintiff did not create a trust. The mother thus agreeing with the defendant had no interest in the money. She could not create a trust. There being no elements of trust shown, no cause of action was stated in the original petition, and it was properly dismissed upon general • demurrer.
By the amendment the plaintiff sought to recover against the defendant as an executor de son tort. This amendment was
Judgment affirmed.